The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, May 13, 1880, Image 4
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-sf
. /
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*
%t)e people.
Om Tbak .
Six Mojrrna
tirtb
. 1.00
Aflpmts •!* Ike People.
Wm
nko
BleHnrUle»M»t. Q
«r»hnn»e-0. R. 'l ti
mmbe
Illuton-O. A. i’hilups.
—B. O. htANRRIiL.
K. 8TXADMAX.
TliER.
,y—H. W. Walk kb.
ibere—D. F. UooTe.v.
AUeodAle- W. li.^ORKBoV.
Rimopo—JoH» 8. IaoNab.
DuntarUd end Qreenlead-^OaoRoi H
Batsl —<
Chert*»»ton--H H. Aletabdiol cf
Oar eubeortHprs and edvertlsereoen rail
upon the nee fret Aifrnt whenever'then
wleh to settln thHr ec ountr. Our AkriiU
ere euthorimd to rooelve end five reerlptr
for ell money* dun ue.
* ana faewbri’ column.
Tile W«Be(able Oardea.
Continue to plant radisbea, lettuce,
Mmutoor, ooru, okra, beans, cantaloupes,
cucumbers, wjuashes and melons for
rocaasslon, and^it joii hero i.ot, you
may still cneiinu. to plant pepper, egg
plants end beets. This is now u good
time to pat in another patch of field peas
or beans. If you don’t need them for
fhe table, they will senro the fowls, the
figs, er the gratethl milch kino.
la the Orchard.
Where heary pruning has been done
P
hi the spring, the fruit trees will now
make rigorous efforts to restore the lost
branches with additions to each. These
should be rubbed off as they appear, and
fhe Cutisge kept down to good bearing
condition. If too much young fruit,
thin out to the capacity of the tree to
perfect. Only by this moans' can we
have real first-class fruit, and expect
Erst class prices.
Potatoes.
Draws msy still be put out, but if
Tine< can be had they are now better
than draws. If the weather Is dry, or
drouth prersils, let your potato ground
be laid off in beds, not ridges or uanc-
Mkfe hills | make boles for the riues,
plant late in the crening, and fill each
nole hith water before filling it with
earth, and they will grow on withobt
rain. Let the vines b« cut shouts foot
long—doubled they will bo six inches in
length—push them down four inches,
leaving out two inches. That is the best
potato planting yon can do. Older
plantings, it tho ridges or beds have been
packed or hardened, must be plowed up
and the soil loosened. Plow the ridges
down and turn the soil back to them—
during moist weather, if practicable—
hut it must be done at all hamrds, or a
good crop need not be expected. If the
vines are taking root between the rows,
loose them up with a fork before too
yank to be disturbed without injury, and
choose tbe middle of a day of sunshine
for the work, so that the vines will be
tough and strong, not apt to break
Cowponed lands yield the largest crops
ef sweet pot alow, bat even poor field
lands may be set out with
very food results for swine.
vines w
ith
To have vigorous pansy plants that
will bloom early, they must bo started
in artificial heet, long before the ground
is warm enongh for flower seeds. When
ready for transplanting, select s place in
the border that has the morning and
late afternoon sun only ; make it mellow
and rich—pansies love richness. How
wonderfully they have been improved in
a short lions by cultivation. A few years
n«ro we had nothing but tho Rule, old -
f shioned johnay-jump up ; now they
are marvellously increased in size, and
appear in every diversity of color, fiom
pure white to jet black, yellow, royal
purple, striped and mottled, violet,
browse, sky bloc, navy blue, tic.
Blessed he pansies ! If I could have
bat one kind of flower, that ote would
be pansies. They arts the first to greet
woe in the spring; before auy other
flower dare appear, here are tbe pansies
looking np with their cheerful, knowing
faces, sod they are the last to desert in
autumn ; long after the flowers have de
parted with Abe ■ere and yellow leaf, they
Knger, to console and comfort. They
are constant, thankful, affectionate.
■Krays want to talk to them just as I
wodd to a bright ebild. I have seen
many human countenances that did not
possess as much intelligent expression
as a group of panties.
Do cultivate a bed of pansies for the
sake of tbe little children. If you are
wot blessed with “little hindering th ings
•f yonr own, do this cinch for somebody
else's child. Children are great lovers
ef flowers, and I have observed that pan
sies ore an especial favorite with them.
How many little hands I have filled with
them—little chubby, dimpled hands;
Kttle thin, wasted hands; little hands
warm with young life, sad little hands
sold and still. There are little hands
fllled with flowers that will not como to
mi again, but will gather fadeless flow
ers from a garden fairer than mine, on
the banks of the iliver of Life.—Aunt
Fanny, Morningside.
CkdarSuoals Faotort.—A meet
ing of the corporators and stockholders
ef the Cedar Shoals Manufacturing
Company was held at Anderson’s Mill—
new the porperty of tho company—on
Toeadny, 27th instant. An organintion
was e{footed by the election of tlie fol.
lowing officers: President, 0. Barber;
secretary and treasurer, J. S. Drenqau;
directors, 8. Dunlap, Rev. A. B.
Brewn, R. I. White, Utlee J. Patter
son, J. F. Davidson, 8. T*. Blaokstrois,
W, H. Harden. A capital atock of
$15,400 was raisod.. The first instal
ment will be called for in a few days. It
was resolved to build at once a first •elaas
grist aad saw mill; work to begin next
week. Three of the Clement attseh-
meats, tbe new aud popelor ssoohinery
for spinning thread from seed cotton,
will be pwt in operation, it is expsotad,
by tbe lot oi October, eoiuuming 500,-
pogeda of seed ebtton onnwallJK
farmers io that section will have
ready cash market
for their
A JLwdyV TIew of yr«afcl»vcew.
A lady writes from Washington to the
Springfield Republicsn as follows: It
scorns to m« that no one, certainly no
one new to Washington, can come here
md see the capitol building without a
thrill'of national pride. It is so grand,
so imposing, the situation so superb and
the grounds about so loy^ly even now
on such days as yesterday aud to-day,
with a real Ircsh tinge of green in the
grass on capitol hill. Inside, the mur
ble staircases, the bronze doors, the fres
coed ceilings and the tiled floors seom to
increase rather than to diminish this
feeling, and it lasts until tho eye falls
upon the gigantic spittoons that stand in
every angle, and sectn to the imeg native
mind like the corrupt and funguous
growth which clings disgus'.ingly in'the
fairest and most unexpected places. 1
never see them without a sort of despair
ing feeling, for they are such a dreadful
blot, and will make one think or every
thing that is vile instead of everything
that is lovely.
To go into the House of Representa
tives is to the uninitiated very much like
being let into a menagerie, for the at
mosphere is very warm and close, the
ventilation is very defective— -an odor
of cigar smoke adds its burden to a sen
sitive organization, and there Is an im
mense amount of howling ou the floor.
This is my impression of it all, although
I’vo listened very intently and tried to
become informed in the ways of the
government of my country. The speaker
spends most of his time in pounding vie
lently with his gavel, and nobody seems
to care whether ho pounds or not-—he
apparently docs it for his own amuse
ment. Then with a very few excep
tions everybody that speaks acts exactly
as if ho intended to annihilate every
body else. I never can understand what
they say, except by snatches, and what I
do hear seems to be of very little im
portance. It does seem so ,ridiculous
for a man to get up and work himself
into a tremendous passion—swing his
arms, pound on Tils desk, walk Up and
down the aisle, grow red in the face and
swell up the veins on his forehead, and
end with a grand peroration about ‘-blow
ing tbe bugle till it resounds again*’—all
of which 1 heard and saw the other day
—while all the other members arc read
ing newspapers, smoking outside the rail,
writing at their desks, chatting with
each other and continually parsing m and
out, while nobody seems to pay any at
tention to this exhibition of feeling.
They seem to Uke special delight in
contradicting each other flatly, insisting
that somebody is out of time or order,
and on the whole I've come to the con
clusion that things couldn't be much
worse anyway—-and wlio knows if they
mightn’t be better—even if women had
a scat in this august (?) body.
Tho Senate is bcttcr---that is, they
don’t rant so violently—but seems slow
and stupid, and Tve found myself won
deriug several times what it all amounts
to, after all. I hav^ been Able, after
giving the closest possible attention for
some time, to make out that they’ve
been agitating the question of a mud
road somewhere in Indiana, nnd I have
hoard something about Indians, and
that’s all.
000
• ' 1 itETT ADVfffttlSEittiXTS.
\
IrtowSaf,'
Pr<|W|Wte, Utw OMputnt,
from the front
omthafrontornMXgnrtton of Umimmo.
^SSteHOMHia tstnt foellnf*. eootlvo-
nrrvous wimk-
Thero tympumu m»y
OM •nulling* It pro*
, U*Ue**e*tbeJar*
0*7 “HHHHVffiulO Torn
.tnrrh germ* produe*
PROF. PAINE’S POSITIVE, NEVER-FAILING TREATMENT.
we
R-noTBtorPHI*, wblehltilth*
EASES ate Prof. P»lno'»l
fiir rruf. Pnlno 1 * Pwoliody]
llth* genu of and
Catarrh Vapor a* directed
..... /IWord. or Bhoi t-hand tn
tO* aMrt woodarful wm oror known la Catarrh,
of Prof.Patno’* Liver Rasa.
wttniM * dajr, until rural,
’•per, AatlMjitlc Powder*.
troitlvr. Forf
treatment ef dtsca**. teuuWo.^^o^ eertItTcata*«
ContumpUon, ate., read th* PMbodjr Kaaotd.
Things That Never Did and Never Will Cure Catarrh.
aretandwl euro* hav* iwro tnorcucmr tnon, »nn novo proven a m -
beentha (•lima that In couildei.-ukon ot c*>-*of catarrhai-nlylng to mo for treatment I Was oblti
to bugin a (riteruallo lnTC*tlntt!or» of tbo whola auMeet. After bnmeton* experiment*, protrac
IS GhltRMt
rotrac
For Description and Coro
cpre basor-nrred m mjr prvtlco.
>e*cif puoa and Core of All Auwaacu, mod lor P.T>f. Patau’* largo Practice of Medicine; 1,000
TREATMENT, tend for Prof. Paine’* Domestic Pr^jtlee or S ow School ReiAodlo*; *00
S Kor*P»raoaal Czaml*»t Ion and Treatment, call or write to Prof. Patna. Z5) S. X tnlb street, 1’hU-
***$? PooIUt*. Nerer-falttnz Cur*6f
MATlOM.'ieo Prof. Paine's AntDeptIc
lor Positive Cura of all lorm* t>f
rreven and ague, chill fever.neuralgia and rhO*
, Vewd-irs oOm's »nd i »tn*rUc Syrup. . .
NERVOUC DCJRUXY. n«* Pruf. l*atoe’» S. P. PIU or Norw<
^^Madleloe* may bo urderod through drugs lata, agents, or dlroetly from the main otBoa,
250 SOUTH tflimi STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
For sale by Leroy Molair, Barnwell, S. C., and O. E. Btekdman, Blaokville. P. C.
mhl
run
" 1! '■ ■■■
Barnwell’s
OKEAT DRV GOODS
—AND-
-ooo-
Weathersbee & Easterling,
Whole*ale and Retail Dealers in
DRY GOODS & GROCERIES.
Full Stuck Always on Hand.
pbesh mw$ umziM*) saslv. •
Cash Paid for Gotten & Conatry Produce
H. W. Walkar
MIDWA^ 8 C.,..
Dealer In J '
Groceries.
Dry Goods,
Hardware,
-AND-
Clot hi
ling,
ROBERT D. WHITE, _
... 0
Marble and Granite Works (
.. 7 • m ., _. ww j*. ^ . r __ m , ,.
MEE^INd- STKEST, COK- HORLBEOK’S ALLEY
U*- OHS.C-
General Merchandise*
Pteaaedon’tf >11 to Rive him a oattr Ho
sal le the beet woods at the lowest prices,
and pays full ttsrores for cottou—in seed
or baled. apl-ly
NEW YORK’S
GAS-LIT LIFE ILLUSTRATED.
i th *
>t ro
otle
nov
20-
A lleTlera of **I*nrndiMe I.oat.”
A San Francisco publisher sent
spcct-span new copy of Milton to a Eodie
editor the other day. The great man
whose labor, prioi to taking charge of an
influential mountain journal, has been
principally confined to writing police
items for the metropolitan papers during
tbe winter and taking exercise in the
hasvest field in the summer, heaving a
i weary aigh as the office boy handed him
the volume, and remarking bitterly:
“More new books to review, I suppose ?”
took ont bis tobacco knife and proceeded
leisurely to cut the virgin pages. “Mil
ton, Milton,’’ he said musingly; “some
New Yorker, I suppose. Well, here
goes for to-morrow’s edition, anyhow :
“We received yesterday a copy of John
Milton’s poems from the enterprising
house ofX. X., San Francisco. The
book opens with a long yarn about ‘Par
adise Lost.’ Ho very improperly com
menees with a long description of hell,
a topic that is never mentioned in this
camp, and gives a most thoroughly ab
surd pen-portrait of the devil. This
person he pictures as many rods in
length, while the best authorities on the
.subject have likened him to a goat. He
goes on to tell of a fight with angels,
wherein the devil, os a matter of course,
gets the wo being from the very
start the under dog in the fight. This is
quite enough for us. John Milton would
do better to return to his legitimate
newspaper sphere. He may be able to
describe a masquerade ball or a street
row, but in our opinion he is a very poor
poet.” This will do for Milton,” said
the editor, as he passed the copy to the
foreman aod turned with a sigh of relief
to the perusal of a reported strike in
South Bulwer,—Gold Hill (Cal.) News.
Auditor’* Notice.
ArorroD’s Office, Barnwell Co. 1
Barnwell C. H., S. 0., May 1,1880. (
Tbe assessors will be at the follow
ing named places on dates mentioned
to take Tax Returns for 1880. All
persons wbo have bought or oojd real
eetate since last return, must be par
ticular and so state to the assessors.
Grahams T. 0 June 1st
Bamberg June 2d
Midway, ..June 8d and 4th
Howell's Mill June 5th aod 7th
Ehrdardt’s Jane 8th and 9th
Botord’s Bridge... .June 10th and llth
Priester’s Store... .June 12th aod 14th
Allendale June 15th and 16th
Erwintori..........June 17th undlSth
Baldoo June 18th aad 21st
Faroe's Store..... June 22d sod 23d
Robbies ...June 24th and 25tb
Mlxson’s Mills June 26th aod 28th
Pattereon’s Mill June 29th
Seven Pine’s School House.. J une 30t h
Blanton’s Mulj lot aad 2d
WHUston -X.Jnly 3d
Elko ....July 8d
Club House ..July 5th and 6th
Fiddle Pond July 7th aod 8th
Blaekvtlle July 9th and 10th
BarnwflH ~ “
Fresh Arrivals. —
5 9 000 Window Shades,
Pretty enongh and Cheap enough to suit every one.
10,000 Rolls Wall Papers,
For Rooms, Halls, Ac., ia endless variety, with Borders to match. Cheap for
Cash.
190 PAIR LACE CURTAINS,
All Pretty Goods. Cheap for Cash. Carpets. Hearth Rugs, Door Mats, Crumb
Clothe, nil Sizes.
Two Sheets of Imported Scotch Floor Oil Cloths, and Warranted of the Very
Best Qaality.
CHR0M08, CHROMOS, CHROMOS.
' A FULL LINK OF—
mmm
All Fresh and Choice Goods, to
public are specially invitod.
i hi eh the attention of my friends and tho
febl9-3m
•Fames G* Bailie,
No. 713 Broad St. Old Stand of Jas, G. Bailie tc Bro.,
AUGUSTA. GA.
•- —~—■
y ir j. i—
" *'
OTTO F. WEITERS,
Wholesale Grocer,
—-AND DEALER IN—
ok villa July »th and loth
■dwell a H... .June Irt to July 20th
a EL LABTiaUE* Auflfcor B. a
If job want the news from every peri
of the Stole rend our State N«wi column
sc&ars, Liquor and Tobacco.
, AGENT FOR THE CELEBRATED
Monarch Whiskey.
A , 7 . i Y : •», * ’ e
Also, L T. A J. G. Frost ft Co.’s Self-Ba!slDg Flour, and Thorn Brothers’
felebratod Butter Crackers. v *
sep2« ly Nos. 108,110. TC* and 181 Boat Bay, Charlseton, 8. C.
G.T. Andrews,
AGENT FOR
RUBBER STAMPS
For Marking Linen, Envelopes, Paper
Cards. &c. Any design ftirnished. Speci
mens of stamps can be seen at store of Mr.
0. E. Steadman, Blaokville, 8. C. ap29-
NOTICE
IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL OF
,my former customers that I have re
sumed the Wagoning business, and all
orders for hauling or any descrlptlofi
left at my residence, or that of Mr.
J. 7. Ingram, will be thankfully receiv
ed, and promptly attended to.
aug7-ly. J. 8. SHUCK.
1880 1880
Spring “*> Suim«r.
The Leading Millinery Establishment.
\ * .I *
All the aew shapes of Bonnets M*d Roto,
meat ef Millinery nad Fancy Dry tlends hi
Augusta. Laces, Ribbons, Flowers. Bat
umi, Zephyr, Corsets, HaodkenMe*. Cel
lars, Veils, Ruchings, Edgings and Insert,
lags- everything In the Mttee Use. For
stylish Bonnot* nnd Hsu, send to
. MHdiN. BRUM CLARK,
819 Brood street, Augusta, 0*
IflF* Demoreeu Psttsrn* for Ladies aad
Children. Send for Catalogue. fcpl6 8m
WhssUr & Wilsca
machines,
8.
Tbe host Sewieg Machine for fomily use
with ail the best and latest attachments, for
■Meat popular prices and op terms to suit
parciiojers- Old Maebinee repaired. Call
aid examine before pnrehisfnr elsewhere.
BCRCKHALTER AGO.
WilUeton. 8 0.
U. A. WALKER.
Importer aad dealer In Italian and
American Marbles, Tomb-stones of
any design, made on most reasonable
tat am. Established In 1792. Char-
lMtoc,B,G, JonlMj
The ahpv. ij thetttk) (?< * Krrirfof sketches of I
shtuly aide of life and clntncter m vbe UrSst Met
puCU, wow being fully Imwirtfted from *ift»to
•ketches in the
National Police Gazette
of New York, watch are realistic and faithful por
traitnrm fruin real life. The illastrmtluns are by the
bent artistic talent attainable, and the dewriptions
are from the pen of the most Rifled journalint and
brilliant writer in America, wbo. It Is conceded, has
rivaled that iuokUt hand at word painting—(. baric
Pickens. It i- sufficient to say that “New York’s
Gaslit Life” W|ll present the moot striking, rlrld and
truthful nlcturra of tbe the under-current of life in
New York Gitv that bait erer been preented to the,
xibile. The National Police; Gazette of New York
a forjsalo by all newsdealers, price* 10 cents per copy
or it can be ordered direct from the publisher.
Hubecrtptlon price, )St per year. The National
Police Goaette, of Now York, has no connection with
any other publication of lt» class, who for gain, as for
as i-xwible copy its title ami appearance.
CAUTION—The public are cautioned against
buying weak imitations of the National Police Ga
zette. In all cases see that the paper is dated from
New York and has the publishers name printed on
eachcopy. « ■ v
Rcmittaneos should lx? made hr poat office order,
draft on New York, or by rtixistered letter, to
RICH \ RI> VC. IPOX. Ibiblisher,
Oor. Spruce and WiPiam Sts, New York City.
G E Steadman’s
•
Beu estate -
-AND-
C0LLEni?f& -UEVC
—FOB SALB! -
A Farm three miles from Blaekville, in a
good neighbnrhood, containing To acres.
Dwelling and out buildings in good order.
Also, several other Houses aud Lots, In
fine nonditltjn ft>r piiitlvatlng. Buccesxful
crops, ntutr Blackvlll**. All of wlilcfi wIH
be treated for on accorootlatlng terms.
Apply to G. Ji. NTEAI'MAN,
BUckvti’e, H. C.
TSG BROAD ST,. AUGUSTA, GA.
^ A Complete Stock of
y Spring and Summer Clothing,
T
HE WHITE
SEWING MACHINE
THE KKST OF A I,I«.
Unrivaled in Appearance,
Unparalleled in Simplicity,
Unsurpassed in Construction,
Unprecedented in Popularity.
And Undisputed in the Broad Claim
oeormSTM*
VERY BEST OUT. RATI NO
QUICKEST SEXEXNO.
MAXOSOHKST, AMD
Host Porfoct Sewing Mat,hint
IN THC WORLD.
V>’'. errs' poptiUrl*y cf tbs White I* the moot MO-
WT'Cina tr.fcu!* to itl oxctrcnco an* ssporiorrty
o»-f clhef machtots. an* In aabwitHng It t* tho
trad* w« pot H •«*on (ft si»»*t*, an* is no ln*tswco
has it eser y*l tailod to MtNW »«V r**ooins**M*S
Is IN la wc.
Th* **m*nd forth*Whit* has twerossod to swtb
sn eatent that we are sow oof «IM to tors *w4
JU. Ooxa.pletw RtorarLzvy TMTse-'Tilrf
o-vmx-y tdvraw xxoizz-vatss La
tia* d.a.y to srvappljr
tixo dwaaSLZiL.dk 1
Every mschino is werrsnted tor 8 years, and
••id ter r th at liberal diicoonts, *r «pon sasy
payaenU. to salt tho comraniosc* st c—tomars.
mrinxn wants) nraoccnzs Tmirw?.
WHITE SEWINtTlIIACHINE CC.?
IK 3M Euclid Are., Osreland, OMs,
—For sale by—
J. D. & T. F. SMITH
290 Bboap St., • - Al’OunTA.Oa.
Sign of the Golden Boot
r l Into in store tho best stftck of
BOOTS AND SHOPS
-A., ’ . .. . '•< ’ - . . . ‘ '
Ever brought to Barnwell county. In prices «md qualify I confidently chaV*
engc comparisou. Especial attention given to Ute selection of
Ladies’ Shoes,
n ^ t
-j
And I cordially iuvite their calls. A perfect stock of Bo'ts and glme* for Gett'
tlctnen s wear. Childrens’ Shoes n sptcia'ty call at once and kec)) calling on
mhl8-3m
MARTIN
BLACKVILLE. H. C.
T36. 730.
HRNRY 8. JORDAN,
THE CLOTHIER,
Has now in slo/e at
Only 5c. Each.
I will receive. In a few days, from Now
York, another lot of goods, at FIVE
CENTH EACH, consisting; of fcanoe Pans.
Brass Hand Bells, Toy Knives. Forks anti
Spoons, Curry Combs, Hammers, Can
Openers, Garden Hoes and Rakes com
bined. Scissors, Lamp 1 hlmneys, Pape-
terle. Note. Letter and Cap Paper per quire,
Envelopes per package. Lead Pencil a
Writing Books, Chromoe, Meclloge, Ink
Slates, ABC Blocks, Checker Boards.
Hook htiaps. Toilet Soap, Tooth Brushes,
Knitting Cotton, Round and Dressing
Boiuhs, Bls'klng, Handkerchiefs. Towels,
Doylas Lace Bibs, Embroidered Marselles
Bibs, Jewelry, Ac. I have a few articles
loft of my Ural lot. consisting as follows,
all of which I < ffer at five cents each
Dippers, Pans, Cake Cutters,Pqpper Boxes
Wash Baslnoa Coffee Canisters, Egg Beal
ets, Potato Mashers, Toasters, Fryl*
Pans, Mouth Organs, Hoop-Skirts, Dine
Novels, Iron Stands, Coffee Stands, Tick
Hammers, Tin Plates, foe. A fresh su{ply
received weekly. I haVe an order for i lot
of second hand books, provided the; can
be purchsed low down. J. 8.8HUCI,
auglB-ly Aynt.
Savannah and Charleston Railrod Co.
* CHANGfe OF SCHEDULE.
April 4 1579.
The following Schedule is in ellct st this
date:
Fast Mail, Daily.
Leave Charleston
Arrive at Savannah - - -
Arriva Jackson villa « •» - .
Leave Savannah - - - *
Arrive Charleston - - <
MigKl fVata, DtUff.
Leave Charleston • •
Arrive mvannah -
Arrive Port Royal - *
Arrive at Angnato
Leave SaraRnah
Leave Port Royal
Leave Angasts
Arrive Ckarieaten
PoU
7 00 a.m.
12 40 p. m.
. 7 50 a. m.
4 00 p. m.
9 65 p. sa.
- 7 50p. m.
■ 0 25 a. m.
■ 4 00 a. m.
6 36a.m.
• 9 00 p. m.
11 00 p m
5 20 a m
7 50 a; m.
— saraea si L^ight Trains.
C, 8. OADSi^N, Bagr. aad SapL
8. •; Rot lotos. Q. F aad T. Agent.
HATS, TriUMCS AND FURNISHING GOODS,
To Tie sold at close figures, to cash buyers. My spccfcforcs are Good Good
Styles. Good Work. Before you buy call on me. *
AT
Corner of Broad and AVasliin^ton Streets
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA,
Conveniently Located To Business.
With Telegraph Oi<e ia tn? Building, and Southern Etpress lo!!¥panj
0®i e Nrxt Eoor to Hotel, Hulking.
SUMMER RATES OF BOARD, P E It DAY,
—Single Moals, flO caMa, j ,, Single Lodgings, 50 cant*. _
julyTGm
KT>.MTJT?PHKV. ProVr *
—-rgt.-.,ar '.L^-Tg-rT
WAVERLY HOUSE,
$2 Charleston, S. C. $2
—■ -
SITUATED IN THE BEND UF KINO
street, (he most fashionable promenade
■o the eftv.
First clftSe In nil its appointments.
Table ft/rnlehed with the bret affonled
■y local, Northern and Southern markets
First ole** Par aud Barber Shop.
Tho finest Billiard Boom in tbe South.
Servants polfte add attentive.
Board. fa r>er day.
*0-Loiter rat<'« by the week of fnmith.
OF.O, W. SULLIVAN,
Latb or A. J. Kesxkbt k Co.,)
Jureft-tf Proprietor.
ORDER YOUR %
SAW MILLS, GRIST MILLS,
CANE MILLS, OIN ENGINES. COTTON SCREWS. SHAFTING PULLEYB,
Hanger’s Journal Boxes, Mill Gearing, Gudgeons, Turbine Water Wheel, Gin
Gearing, Cbeapl JnJeon’* Governers, Dlston’s Circular Saw, and Gutners and
Files, Belting and Babbitt Mi tal and Brass Fitting, Globe and Check Yalvea
and Whistles, Gauge*, etc., anulron Brans Castings and repairs from
Oeo- "R. Lombard & Co.,
FOREST CITY JOUNJRV AND MACHINE WORKS,
SKAa ms water tow*r, 170 ri.vWfcx street,
AUGITHTA. GFIORGIA.
OLD IROK AISTD BRASS WANTED.
F* W# Wagener & Co**
OHASIiSB T0N B O.
159 101, 163 and 165 East Bay. 2, 4, nnd 12 Queen Street.
13,15, 17 and 19 Veffllue Kange.
Wholesale Grocers and Liquor Dealers,
Cotton and 7N aval Htore^ Kactor**.
S)le Agents for Georgia and Wagoner Grange Gu«no., Liberal advances made
on Shipments of Cottotl.
Wc have a special Produce iXpamrent for which wc solicit consignments of
Rough Rice, Peas, etc. ’ ..sppia-fim
EDWTS DATES,
CHARLES K. BATES,
GEORGE C. S ELM AN,
james p. a runs.
TH08. R. MrGAUAN,
EDWIN BATES & CO.
JOBBERS OF
DRY GOODS a»° CLOTHING.
/
Nos 122 and 124 Meeting St, Charleston, 8. 0/
* * *• *iu
ROBERTSON. TAYLOR & CO..
a.c^Mor, |9 GEO. W. WILLIAMS 4 CO.
K.. .
EOTTOS MCT01S, VllllSUl tlOEHS.
— AN D—
COMMISSION MBHCHAKT8,
1 A NO 3 HA.YPTK I9XRKKX. <T1ARL.KHXON, S. C.
J»“C0X8IGKMKXT8 OF COTTON SOLICTTED.-e«
99-an ’